Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Syria ‘Chemical attacks’ kill hundreds

Chemical weapons expert Hamish de Bretton-Gordon says the unverified footage is consistent with chemical weapon use

Rockets with toxic agents were launched at the suburbs of the Ghouta
region early on Wednesday as part of a major bombardment on rebel
forces, they say.
The Syrian army says the accusations have been fabricated to cover up rebel losses.
The main opposition alliance said that more than 1,000 people were killed by the attacks.
Activist networks also reported death tolls in the hundreds, but these could not be independently confirmed.
It is also not clear how many died in the bombardment of the sites
and how many deaths were due to any exposure to toxic substances.

In a statement, the army described the
accusations of chemical weapons use as grave, and stressed the
military’s right to fight what it described as terrorism in Syria.

It accused the opposition of fabricating the accusations to divert
attention from the huge losses its forces had suffered recently.
UK Foreign Secretary William Hague and French President Francois
Hollande called for UN inspectors to be allowed access to the area and
said Britain and France would raise the issue at the UN.
If confirmed, the attacks would mark a “shocking escalation in the use of chemical weapons in Syria”, Mr Hague said.
The Arab League echoed the call for the inspectors to go to the site,
while Saudi Arabia called for the UN Security Council to convene
immediately to discuss the matter.
The attack took place as part of a heavy government bombardment of
the region surrounding Damascus, where government forces have been
trying to drive out rebel forces.
Casualties were reported in the areas of Irbin, Duma and Muadhamiya among others, activists said.
Footage uploaded to YouTube from the scene by activists shows many people being treated in makeshift hospitals.
The videos show victims, including many children, having convulsions.
Others are apparently immobile and have difficulty breathing.
The BBC has not been able to authenticate the footage fully, but based on additional checks made, it is believed to be genuine.
“Many of the casualties are women and children. They arrived with
their pupils dilated, cold limbs and foam in their mouths,” a nurse at a
Duma medical facility, Bayan Baker, told Reuters.

The number of casualties is much higher than in previous allegations of chemical weapons attacks.

The Sana news agency said the reports of the attack were “baseless”, quoting a “media source”.
The reports were “an attempt to divert the UN chemical weapons
investigation commission away from carrying out its duties”, Sana said.
The head of the inspection mission, Ake Sellstrom, said he had seen TV footage of the latest attack but nothing more.
“It sounds like something that should be looked into,” Mr Sellstrom told the Swedish TT news agency.
Mr Sellstrom said that whether his team went to the scene would
depend on whether any UN member state went to the UN Secretary General
and asked them to.
The inspectors arrived on Sunday and are due to investigate three
other locations, including the northern town of Khan al-Assal, where
some 26 people were killed in March.
‘Horrific’ footage
The latest incident throws up more questions than answers, the BBC’s Middle East Editor Jeremy Bowen reports.
Many will ask why the government would want to use such weapons at a
time when inspectors are in the country and the military has been doing
well militarily in the area around Damascus, he says.
Some will suspect that the footage has been fabricated, but the
videos that have been emerged would be difficult to fake, he adds.
Hamish de Bretton-Gordon, a former commanding officer at the UK’s
Joint Chemical Biological Radiological Nuclear Regiment, told the BBC’s
Today programme that the footage was “horrific” and agreed that it would
be “very difficult to stage-manage”.
If the UN inspectors were able to get to the scene, they should have
the equipment to identify the chemical that had been used, if any, Mr de
Bretton-Gordon said.
Residue from any agent used should be detectable at the scene for a period of two to three days or possibly a week, he said.
Both the rebels and government forces have accused each other of using chemical weapons during the conflict.
It has not been possible to independently verify the claims.
In July 2012, the Syrian government implicitly admitted what had long
been suspected by experts in the field of chemical weapons
proliferation – that Syria had stocks of chemical weapons.
Experts believe it has large undeclared stockpiles of mustard gas and sarin nerve agent.
Damascus said the weapons, stored and secured by the armed forces,
would never be used “inside Syria”, but could be used against an
external attack.